NSW mums who cannot breastfeed will have the option of giving their babies milk from donor mothers if a community milk bank is funded by the state government.

Nationals MP Geoff Provest (Tweed) is lobbying the government to stump up the necessary 600,000 dollars a year in funding to bring the service to NSW.
"If they did, it would dramatically decrease illnesses in children. It is commonsense," the Sydney Morning Herald quoted him as saying.
Marea Ryan, of the Mothers Milk Bank said premature babies in particular needed breast milk to protect them against disease.
"Babies' lives would be lost without [the bank]; it reduces infection rates and it is a better health outcome for the state," she said.
Carmel Tebbutt, a spokeswoman for NSW Health Minister said the state and federal governments were still discussing how to implement a "national breastfeeding strategy".
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Midwife Annie Dawson, also from Brisbane, relied on donations milk to feed her newborn twins, Nina and Miles.
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"In the first month it was so beneficial for my stress levels, because I could give them what they needed.
"The Australian government does need to give [community milk banks] the importance they deserve," she said.
Source-ANI